Monday, July 20, 2015

Iraq Authorities Continue To Underreport Casualties In War Against Islamic State

For quite some time the Iraqi government has been reluctant
to report full casualties. This started with Nouri al-Maliki who tried to
promote himself as the law and order prime minister. The government would
routinely under report those that fell in bombings and kept down the monthly
death totals far below other agencies to make it look like security was
improving under the premier. When the war broke out with the Islamic State both
Baghdad and Irbil went into propaganda mode. That meant they kept up the
practice of under reporting bombings, but also would rarely report losses
amongst the security forces. The result is that thousands have been killed and
wounded over the last year with no public record. That was shown by two recent government
reports that continued to underreport the number of losses.

First, on July
2, 2015 the Human Rights Ministry released some casualty data. It said that
4,772 people had been killed and 28,575 had been wounded in the country since
June 2014. These figures did not include Ninewa, Salahaddin, Anbar or the KRG.
Those were three of the four most violent provinces in Iraq, and where the
Islamic State had seized territory. The press report didn’t say whether this
was just civilian casualties or included members of the security forces.

That same day the Peshmerga Ministry announced
how many of its members had been lost in the war. It stated that 1,212
peshmerga had died and around 7,000 had been injured. Those were roughly the
same figures that a Kurdish parliamentarian told
the press at the end of May, which were 1,205 dead and 6,595 wounded.

The problem with these figures was that they were lower than
what was reported in the press, which in turn were below the real number of
casualties. For example, the media reported 10,508 people killed from June 2014
to June 2015 in just Babil, Baghdad, Diyala, and Kirkuk. That didn’t include
victims of Islamic State bombings in the south. Even if only civilians were
included and not members of the security forces there were still 8,339 deaths
during that period, almost double the 4,772 in the Human Rights Ministry
report. Likewise, there have been 2,657 peshmerga deaths in the newspapers,
more than double the amount the Peshmerga Ministry mentioned. The true numbers
are probably even much higher. As a recent Al
Mada article speculated there might have been up to 50,000 casualties from
June 2014 to June 2015. The government however has been scared to report the
real figures fearing that it would undermine morale.

What the two ministries did admit to was far more wounded
then had been acknowledged before. The Human Rights and Peshmerga Ministries’
statistics minus what Musings On Iraq counted revealed 2,350 wounded outside of
Ninewa, Salahaddin, Anbar and the KRG, and 1,674 peshmerga injured that had not
been mentioned earlier. That was over 4,000 victims of the war that the
government and press never acknowledged until now. That raises the question of
how many more people have fallen to the conflict that the authorities have not
admitted to.

In all wars government’s revert to propaganda to maintain
the public’s support and portray an air of victory. Baghdad and Irbil are no
different. Their announcements are always filled with reports of hundreds of
Islamic State fighters being killed and captured, one strategic town after
another being taken all creating a relentless story of success. What is lost in
that narrative is the costs of the war. The Human Rights and Peshmerga Ministry
revealed almost 7,000 people killed and wounded that were either not admitted
to until now or still not officially reported. The real figures may never be
made public. That means how many Iraqis have been lost in the war may never be
known.

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About Me

Musings On Iraq was started in 2008 to explain the politics, economics, security, culture and history of Iraq via original articles and interviews. If you wish to contact me personally my email is: motown67@aol.com